
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2011
Pages: 203-222
Series: The Philosophy of Science in a European Perspective
ISBN (Hardback): 9789400711792
Full citation:
, "The arrival of the fittest", in: Explanation, prediction, and confirmation, Berlin, Springer, 2011


The arrival of the fittest
pp. 203-222
in: Dennis Dieks, Stephan Hartmann, Thomas Uebel, Marcel Weber, Wenceslao J. Gonzalez (eds), Explanation, prediction, and confirmation, Berlin, Springer, 2011Abstract
In one of his early sketches from the Russian Revolution Jaroslav Hasek tells the story of a more zealous than competent Red Army commander who sought to foster literacy among the peasants in the area where he was stationed by posting a written notice ordering them to learn how to read within three days. Those inhabitants of the county still illiterate after this period were to be shot. Had the local Bolshevik commissar (Hasek) not crossed the commander's plans, the proposition, "All adult inhabitants of the county are literate," might have become true, and its truth would have been explainable by appeal to a sort of selection. Some people believe that adaptation by means of natural selection proceeds more or less along the lines of Colonel Jerochymov's program of literacy by firing squad. Selection, they believe, explains only the survival but not the arrival of the fittest.
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2011
Pages: 203-222
Series: The Philosophy of Science in a European Perspective
ISBN (Hardback): 9789400711792
Full citation:
, "The arrival of the fittest", in: Explanation, prediction, and confirmation, Berlin, Springer, 2011